Ediphors must have been the most complex video projecting beasts out there. They essentially etched their frames in a thin layer of oil with an electron beam on a reflective surface, rotated into a big shiny light source and presented this on screen. Afterwards, the frame literally was erased using something like a windshield-wiper... Yet, the resulting picture was pretty good and they made those kind of machines right until 1990.
Haha, yeah, it was the best of the best of CRT projectors out there. My unit was taken from a cluster of four which was part of a simulator that was retrofitted with DLP projectors, because the maintenance on those things became too expensive, as Barco's support on it expired. The DLP picture, while technically brighter, never looked as good as the original image and had some serious artifacts on the edge-blended parts. It takes some efforts to keep those beasts humming and its footprint is larger than most DCI projectors. Since it uses relatively short throw lenses, your setup options are also limited. But if all the video projectors I've seen over the year, this machine put out the most film-like image. If you had a good, low compressed source, the resulting image would almost look like looking at 100% stable film.
I guess the only thing that's better is either real film or an OLED or LED display of equal size. But even some OLEDs sometime suffer from some strange aliasing effects in dark scenes. I often thought this was due to limited bitrates of the compressed material, but I recently tried this with an uncompressed 10-bit HDR stream and still, the effect was present in some shots and apparently that's a common issue in OLED panels...
Originally posted by Marco Giustini
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I guess the only thing that's better is either real film or an OLED or LED display of equal size. But even some OLEDs sometime suffer from some strange aliasing effects in dark scenes. I often thought this was due to limited bitrates of the compressed material, but I recently tried this with an uncompressed 10-bit HDR stream and still, the effect was present in some shots and apparently that's a common issue in OLED panels...
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